Posted on 29 April 2008. Tags: credit unions, Independent Community Bankers, Ron Ence, The Hill
Makes the Payday Pundit sad to see this, but banks and credit unions are blaming each other for scuttling federal legislation to better help credit unions compete with banks. This article in The Hill newspaper says the bill also helps credit unions provide “alternatives” to payday loans. From the article:
The bill would allow credit unions to offer alternatives to payday loans and to expand their geographic reach. But banks complain that, due to an overbroad definition of so-called “underserved areas” by the credit union regulator, credit unions would have free rein to lend throughout broad geographic areas like Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and Houston without requirements to serve low-income consumers.
Business loans made in such areas would be exempt from the usual credit union caps on business lending.
“They would have the ability to make unlimited business loans from Northwest Washington, D.C.,” said the vice president of congressional affairs for the Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA), Ron Ence.
How convenient for credit unions that shortly after payday lending was effectively banned in the District of Columbia, they may get federal legislation to step into the short-term loan market in places like the District. As the saying goes, as cynical as you are, it’s hard to keep up.
Posted in alternatives, industry, media coverage, The Hill
Posted on 08 April 2008. Tags: Center for Responsible Lending, The Hill
This article from The Hill newspaper (an Inside-the-Beltway type publication) calls Eric Stein, ”the top lobbyist for the Center for Responsible Lending….” However, no where on CRL’s website does it say that the group lobbies or has lobbyists on staff. Here’s what it does say:
{CRL’s} Scope of Work
CRL’s staff includes attorneys, researchers, and policy analysts in North Carolina, Washington DC, and California who study and report on predatory lending matters and monitor legislative and regulatory activity in state capitols and in the US Congress. CRL’s work has five main components:
Policy and Technical Assistance: sharing market and legal knowledge with advocates and policymakers across the country interested in reforming lending practices.
Research: producing research on predatory lending to inform policymakers, regulators, and others on its extent and impact.
Coalition-Building: supporting national and state organizations concerned about predatory lending.
Litigation: partnering with other advocates to advance predatory lending litigation and submitting legal briefs on key legal issues.
Communications: promoting public awareness and providing a web-based archive of information for local legislators and advocates.
Posted in Center for Responsible Lending, industry critics